Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program





'Nugget' Beans
 
Sub-Category: Bush
Yellow (wax)
 
Sub-Category 2:
Description: Bush yellow (wax) bean with straight, round, 5 3/4-inch, deep-yellow pods with buttery flavor and white beans Resistant to common bean mosaic.
Days To Maturity: 52-53
Seed Sources:
 
Rating Summary
 
Overall: (4.5 Stars)Overall
Taste: (5.0 Stars)Taste
Yield: (4.5 Stars)Yield
Ease/Reliability: (4.5 Stars)Ease/Reliability
 
Reviews
 
Login to share your Review of Nugget.

Number of Reviews: 2

Sort Reviews By:
  [Help]
KEY: O=Overall Rating, T=Taste, Y=Yield, E=Ease

Reviewed on 08/11/2007 by tom howard - An experienced gardener

Overall Overall
Taste Taste
Yield Yield
Ease/Reliability Ease

Chenango, New York, United States
Frost Free Season: 103 - 123 days
Soil Texture: Loam
Garden Size: Large - More than 1,600 square feet (40' x 40')
Sun Exposure: 6 to 8 hours per day

This is a very tasty variety. The later crop(s) tend toward disease, and are thus not especially useful for canning, but the early crops are excellent for that purpose. For fresh eating, very fine all summer. No problem with germination in 60 degree soil--a little touchy in cool soil. Grown it five different years--in terms of productivity, three excellent, one very good, one fair.
 

Reviewed on 03/09/2006 by Lillith - An intermediate gardener

Overall Overall
Taste Taste
Yield Yield
Ease/Reliability Ease

Apache, Arizona, United States
Frost Free Season: 163 - 183 days
Soil Texture: Sand
Garden Size: Medium - 400 square feet to 1,600 square feet
Sun Exposure: More than 8 hours per day

I love how easy it is to see and pick yellow beans amongst the green leaves! This variety is much more tender and tasty than Roc'Dor. It produces like crazy as long as you keep picking it. We have to provide a grid support for the bushes because the beans get heavy and the winds are hard here.
 




Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program, © 2004-2024, All Rights Reserved
Cornell Garden Based Learning, Cornell University College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Horticulture Section